While the British intervention was meant to be a temporary state of affairs, British forces continued to occupy Egypt for decades afterwards. In 1914, fearing that the nationalist Khedive Abbas II would form an alliance with the
Ottoman Empire against the United Kingdom during the
First World War, the British administration in Egypt deposed him in favour of his uncle,
Hussein Kamel. The legal fiction of Ottoman sovereignty was terminated, and the
Sultanate of Egypt that had been destroyed by the Ottomans in 1517 was re-established, with Hussein Kamel as
Sultan. No longer an Ottoman vassal state, Egypt was declared a
British protectorate. Five years later, nationalist opposition to the United Kingdom's continued dominance of Egyptian affairs sparked the
Egyptian Revolution of 1919, prompting the British to formally recognise Egypt as an independent sovereign state in 1922. ʻUrabi's revolt had a profound and long-lasting impact on Egypt, surpassing even the efforts of resistance hero
Omar Makram in its significance as an expression of
nationalistic sentiments in Egypt. It would later play a very important role in
Egyptian history, with some historians noting that the 1881-1882 revolution laid the foundation for mass politics in Egypt. In July 1952, when
Mohamed Naguib, one of the two principal leaders of the
Egyptian Revolution of 1952, addressed crowds of supporters in Cairo's
Ismailia Square on the toppling of King
Farouk, he consciously linked this 20th century revolution to 'Urabi's revolt against the Egyptian monarch seven decades earlier, reciting 'Urabi's words to Khedive Tewfik that the people of Egypt were "no longer inheritable" by any ruler. The new revolutionary government mimicked 'Urabi in declaring that Ismailia Square, the main public plaza in Cairo, henceforth be
Tahrir Square (
Liberation Square). During the tenure of
Gamal Abdel Nasser, who led the Revolution with Naguib and succeeded him as Prime Minister and later President, ʻUrabi would be hailed as an Egyptian patriot and a national hero. He also inspired
political activists living in
Ceylon. ==Tributes==